Do you find piracy more fun than consuming the pirated content?
I feel like lately I’ve been doing more piracy than actually using the content I’ve been pirating. Curating a library has been so enjoyable lately, I’m not the only one right?
Right there with ya. I'm a data hoarder first and foremost. I have two goals when it comes to piracy:
A) If I have ever watched, read, listened, played, or otherwise enjoyed a piece of media, I will have it available at all times.
B) Do what I can to preserve said data so 40 years from now when I'm telling kids about some generic super hero comic, or SNES game, or obscure TV miniseries, I can pull that shit up in seconds instead of being the old senile man telling stories.
I got 30TB of space, I got almost every movie, TV show, stand up special, album, video game, comic book, novel, and essential software that I want (and adding more daily), and it's all served up to whatever friend wants it via Plex or whatever-other-means-I-need-depending-on-the-media.
Meanwhile I'm on my 35th watch through of Archer lol
This. I love just raiding local libraries for disks, checking them all out, and archiving. Only have a few tens of gigabytes rn (I'm a newbie), and only a few gigs of "downloaded for free" music, but I'm enjoying both the media and the process. Mostly just YouTube-music scraping with ytmp3, but looking to get more serious soon.
lol, have you got all your batteries and inverters setup lol. In all seriousness, I used to hoard, but it's too much hassle, I've got too big a backlog of stuff to organise, and yeah I'll just redownload stuff I know is popular enough to remain available. I do like watching my ratios though, making sure I'm doing my bit to keep the water flowing. Data in transit as storage. Treating torrents as a form of ephemeral storage, where it can come back to me if I wish for it again. Perhaps I'm describing something more like IPFS though.
I had so much time yet so few things to watch and play growing up, I think I've become a data hoarder as a "response" to this. Now I love being able to provide friends & family all the content they could ever want.
Same exact thing with me. It's so hard to make myself sit through games since I feel like everything is just a download away, but I get SO excited when a friend comes to me for a file.
I adore hacker and torrenting culture. I seed terabytes of data per month and run a media server for all my friends and family. Seeing my torrent client upload speed saturated with hundreds of people from all over the globe is honestly a vibe.
Sort of. I like archiving and passing on stuff that is useful and likely to be forgotten. Laws and morals just get in the way. Hail Satan, praise Prometheus, and fuck the police!
Yes I just see it as a necessary evil. It's also nice to know if corporations ever decide to wipe all their content off the Internet or something I always have my trusty hard drives packed with all my favorite media.
I never understood this until I saw link rot in action. Great projects just disappeared when people forgot to renew domain names or hosting contracts. Others went away when big services like Geocities vanished. Wikipedia and Google censorship took out a lot of others.
Honestly, the interesting tidbits you learn as you dig yourself into that rabbit hole is actually quite intriguing and fun. So yeah - I'd say it is also quite "fun" for the process itself!
i run a piracy group on telegram and i dont play games barely ever now. I repack games. I like to say my favorite game is repacking games.... I have tons of mine and others games installed and never play them beyond maybe testing the game i just cracked works and the DLC is working etc. I keep installing games until i have no room for repacking clear them out and then start over. Its sick. My poor pc. And now that google has basically killed unlimited gsuites im in major trouble. Paying for cloud storage is expensive.
I don't just pirate for the sake of piracy. If I download something, it's because I either intend to use it or watch it or because a family member asked me to get it for them.
That said, even though I do it for the destination, I love the journey as well. I've been torrenting for a little over 10 years now, and for most of that time, I was just a hit-and-run user because I didn't have dedicated resources for doing it. I ran qBittorrent in a virtual machine, grabbed my stuff, and then wiped it out. Last year though, after years of torrenting without consequences, I got two love letters from my ISP within a very short period of time, and because of that, I decided to redo my setup. I now use a dedicated computer as a seedbox over a VPN and try to seed as much as I can. It's sort of funny. My seedbox sits on a shelf in my bedroom and I always have a strange sense of satisfaction when I walk by or lay awake in bed and see the little hard drive LED flashing away because somewhere in the world, someone's connected to my little computer to grab a copy of something that I also wanted.
Honestly I'm kinda a datahoarder lol so I basically archive things for the sake of preservation. In this aspect I guess this coincides with your point, since many things I pirate I don't really consume, I just might potentially consume, or find it valuable, so I pirate it and keep it lol
I recently bought 4x18tb hdds and made a NAS to preserve all the things I love. Even have archivebox on a different machine that saves the stuff to the NAS!
Piracy is heavily intertwined with self host/privacy for me so yeah same. I have the whole servarr stack setup but I probably use it the least out of everyone on it. My wife watches several movies a day when she can so its mainly for her. But I love building out the services and adding new things.
Lurking through communities related to my favorite literary genres while having Z-Lib is like walking into a candy store as a 10-year-old and being told that you can get all that you want free of charge. Of course curating a library is enjoyable lmao
I actually like the download limit that Z-Lib has for regular users. If you use it up, it moght be a good time for you to go actually read what you have downloaded.
Kinda. I may have set up a Mac OS VM on my computer and downloaded Final Cut and Logic Pro just to say "Ha! Fuck you Apple!". I have no GPU passed through. I don't know why I did this.
i've had a lot of free time on my hands the last 2 weeks (recovering from surgery) and i've been spending so much time just,,,doing the piracy. setting up my little torrenting station, finding things to download and shit. it's so fun honestly, my only problem is that i don't know what to download next.
I have a seedbox that I pay for. I was running everything on a NAS and it got too resource intensive. I run Radarr and Sonarr to pull in my content, Overseerr so my friends can add movies without texting me for every request, and serve it all with Plex.
It was a lot of fun setting up and sharing with friends, but I just watched Fast X last night. Can't beat Vin Diesel crashing two helicopters with a car and using then as wrecking balls.
Same setup. I love just having everything automated. I remember back when you had to go searching for an episode right after it stopped airing. Now it just takes care of itself.
Beyond "trying out" games. I like the idea of saving things or quickly grabbing things that might not be available for long. For example on a hard drive somewhere I have that early test build of Skate that was leaked like a year or two ago.
I'll also say that as I get older I really appreciate how many more plug-and-play resources there are now. I can get a whole game package that self installs and I'm good to go. No more having to get an ISO from some sketchy Russian site or rolling the dice on TPB and then mounting it to virtual disk. With the power of adblockers/tracking blockers I can stream basically anything from any service with a few clicks from the megathread.
I enjoy getting things for free when I otherwise shouldn't be able to. Piracy lets me indulge that without doing anything illegal so I have hard drives full of stuff even if I never play/watch/read it.
I’ll say I spent more time and had more fun jailbreaking my old Nintendo consoles than I did playing the countless hours of games I put on them.
There’s something really magical about having to fold a paper clip and put it into the joycon rails to MAYBE get your Switch to boot into Recovery Mode.
I made a Pandora battery back in high school to mod friends PSPs. I still have no idea how the heck removing a pin from the battery causes it to do what it does but heck, I felt like a wizard.
But of course with unlimited access to games it meant I tried everything and completed nothing.
I raised to be one, so I just LOVE searching for this stuff, but nowadays so much more fun because so many good pirates share their experiences, and they make it so MUCH more fun to check and find stuff so MANY alternatives I love it this is superb.
I started as a hobby but slowly weened my immediate friends family off of subscriptions because I like seeing the media actually be consumed and now I can't ever do maintenance on my server because someone is always using something
Can't relate. I don't have dedicated torrenting hardware, storage, or networking, so I can't do data hoarding. I don't game or watch TV myself so I only pirate software for myself and TV shows for friends and family, to prevent them from giving money to Netflix.
I actually downloaded Dune like 4 times, and spent hours remuxing a perfect franken-version which I'm yet to watch.
My LG C2 supports dolby atmos digital+ audio (but not truehd), and supports dolby vision profile 8, but not 7. Blu rays come with profile 7 and truehd. And streamable version of files come with dolby 5 video, and dolby digital audio. So I ended up converting the original blu ray from 7 to 8, with a multi step process with dovi_tool and ffmpeg, and then when remuxing I used the audio from the webDL version, so I could get both dolby vision 8 from a blu ray mux, and dolby digital audio from a webDL version.